Beipu

Beipu Township (Chinese: 北埔鄉; pinyin: Běipǔ Xiāng; Hakka: Pet-phû-hiông) is a rural township in Hsinchu County, Taiwan. Beipu is well known in Taiwan as a center of Hakka culture, especially for production of dongfang meiren tea and its special Hakkanese blends of tea and nuts called lei cha.

Beipu Township
北埔鄉

Hoppo
Beipu Township in Hsinchu County
Beipu Township
北埔鄉
Beipu Township in Hsinchu County
Coordinates: 24°39′50″N 121°4′5″E
CountryRepublic of China
ProvinceTaiwan
CountyHsinchu
Government
  TypeRural township
Area
  Total50.6676 km2 (19.5629 sq mi)
Population
 (Nov. 2017)
  Total9,408
  Density190/km2 (480/sq mi)

History

The town was the scene of the 1907 Hoppo Uprising against Japanese rule of Taiwan when insurgents of both Hakka and indigenous Saisiyat extraction attacked Japanese officials and their families. In retaliation, Japanese military and police killed more than 100 Hakka people, the majority of whom were young men from Neidaping (內大坪), a small village in the mountainous southern part of the township.[1]

Demographics

As of 2014, Beipu had a population of 9,784, of whom 98 percent were Hakka.

Administrative divisions

The township comprises nine villages: Beipu, Nanxing, Dahu, Puwei, Shuiji, Nanpu, Dalin, Nankeng, and Waiping.

Tourist attractions

Notable natives

References

  1. Yang Ching-ting (28 Nov 2007). "Time to recall the Beipu Uprising". Taipei Times. p. 8. Archived from the original on 20 June 2018. Retrieved 9 Aug 2016.
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